In some embodiments of the invention, encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterials are described. In certain embodiments the nanostructures described are semiconducting nanomaterials encapsulated with ordered carbon shells. In some aspects a method for producing encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterials is disclosed. In some embodiments applications of encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterials are described. #1#
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#1# 1. An encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterial comprising:
a semiconducting nanomaterial having a diameter and a surface, the diameter of the semiconducting nanomaterial having a magnitude between about 1 nm and about 100 nm;
an encapsulant, the encapsulant enclosing the semiconducting nanomaterial and comprising an ordered carbon shell; and
an interface between the ordered carbon shell and the semiconducting nanomaterial, the interface decorated with islands of metal.
#1# 2. The encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterial of
the diameter of the semiconducting nanomaterial is between about 10 nm and about 50 nm.
#1# 3. The encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterial of
the ordered carbon shell comprises graphitic sheets of carbon.
#1# 4. The encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterial of
the interface between the ordered carbon shell and the semiconducting nanomaterial is atomically sharp.
#1# 5. The encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterial of
the semiconducting nanomaterial comprises one selected from the group consisting of a quantum dot, a nanoparticle, a nanorod, a nanowire, and a nanotube.
#1# 6. The encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterial of
the semiconducting nanomaterial comprises a semiconductor selected from the group consisting of an elemental semiconductor, a compound semiconductor, and a combination of elemental and compound semiconductors; and
each element of the semiconductor is substitutable by an element of equal valence.
#1# 7. The encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterial of
the semiconductor comprises a semiconducting superlattice.
#1# 8. The encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterial of
the semiconducting nanomaterial is rendered oxidation-resistant by the ordered carbon shell.
#1# 9. The encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterial of
the intrinsic electronic and optical properties of the semiconducting nanomaterial are preserved.
#1# 10. The encapsulated semiconducting nanomaterial of
an electronically active junction is formed between the semiconducting nanomaterial and the ordered carbon shell.
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This invention was made with Government support under contract number DE-AC02-98CH10886, awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
The invention relates to the field of encapsulating nanomaterials and, in particular, to the encapsulation of semiconducting nanowires and carbon-encapsulated semiconducting nanowires.
Recognizing the challenges of obtaining passivated nanoscale semiconductors, the technology described herein offers a way of passivating nanoscale objects and discloses structures that result from employing the technology.
Thus, in some embodiments methods for passivating semiconducting nanomaterials are presented. In some embodiments passivation of elemental semiconductors is described; in some embodiments passivation of compound semiconductors is described. In some embodiments semiconducting superlattices are passivated by ordered shells of graphitic carbon. In some embodiments the passivated semiconducting nanomaterials retain their inherent optical, magnetic, and electrical properties.
In some embodiments passivated semiconducting nanomaterials are described. In some embodiments the passivated nanomaterials may be used in magnetic, electronic, optical, and electro-optical devices. In some embodiments the nanomaterials may be employed as sensors, light sources, light absorbers, and the like.
It should be understood that the foregoing, being a summary, is necessarily a brief description of some aspects of the invention, which may be better understood with reference to the drawings and the following detailed description.
In the field of nanotechnology vocabulary is often ill-defined. However, as used herein, “nanoscale” refers to dimensions between about 0.1 nm and 500 nm. In this realm, objects may be referred to by their “dimensionality” from the number of degrees of freedom available to the charge carriers in the object. Quantum dots, for example, are zero-dimensional clusters of atoms or molecules a few (≦10) nanometers in diameter. This is to be differentiated from the term “dimension” which refers to the size of the object. Usually the smallest dimension of an object is referred to as its “diameter,” even if the cross-section of the object in the plane of the diameter is not circular. Thus quantum dots, nanorods, nanowires, nanotubes, nanospheres, nanoparticles, and so on all have diameters, the dimension of which is on the order of nanometers. In the abstract, and for purposes of discussion rather than limitation, these objects may all be termed “nanomaterials.”
Semiconductors are materials that may be insulating or conducting, depending on the temperature and the presence of impurities in the material. Silicon, on which virtually all modem electronic technology is based, is an elemental semiconductor. Elemental semiconductors consist of pure elements, like silicon (Si) and germanium (Ge). Si and Ge are both in Group IV of the periodic table of the elements, and are often referred to, with other elements of the same group, as group IV semiconductors. To obtain different properties, such as band gap or carrier mobility, members of Group IV may be substituted for each other, as in Si1−xGex, where x is less than or equal to one. Other semiconductors may be compounds. Gallium nitride (GaN), a material from which blue light-emitting diodes (LEDs) can be made, is a III-V semiconductor, so called because Ga is an element in Group III and N is a Group V element. Compounds of elements from Groups II and VI may also be semiconducting. An example of a II-VI semiconductor is cadmium selenide (CdSe), a preferred compound for quantum dots. Just as Si and Ge can substitute for one another, elements of Group III, e.g. Ga and Al, can be substituted in large or small amounts. In addition to other members of Group II, many transition metals may be substituted for Cd in II-VI compounds. In fact, any element that has the same, or equal, valence, i.e. is equivalent, may be substituted, e.g. Cd1−xMnxTe or Cd1−xZnxTe. Group V and VI substitutions work similarly, e.g. InAs1−xPx and CdSe1−xTex. Some transition metal oxides, such as titania (TiO2) and zinc oxide (ZnO), both used in sunscreens, are also semiconductors.
Semiconductors have very interesting properties. For example, the resistance of a semiconductor can be changed over orders of magnitude by adding parts per million of dopants (desirable and controllable impurities). Semiconductors have gaps in their electronic energy bands which results in threshold voltages below which current cannot flow, making them suitable as diodes and transistors. These gaps also restrict absorption and emission of light by a semiconductor to discrete wavelengths. In addition, when light is absorbed charge carriers are created, changing the electrical properties of the semiconductor. Solar cells make use of this property to convert light energy into electrical energy.
Not all impurities are desirable or controllable, however. Impurities and imperfections can add electronic energy levels within the bandgap, which may have unpredictable effects on the semiconductor's properties. Surfaces of semiconductors are common sources of energy states such as these, producing surface electronic states, or surface states, in the band gap. Surface states, caused by the surface itself or by impurities adsorbed on the surface, change the properties of semiconductors in uncontrollable and unpredictable ways. To avoid surface states, semiconductors may be passivated by materials that leave their original electrical and optical properties intact. Si has a native oxide, SiO2, that serves to passivate the Si surface. This is one of the materials properties of Si that makes it so suitable for use in electronic devices. Not all semiconductors have surface oxides, however, and even those that do may not be passivated by them. Other materials, then, must be found that can satisfy the bonds that cause surface states.
Bulk semiconductors, the form used in electronics and LEDs, depend on their intrinsic band gaps and impurity states for their electrical and optical properties. Nanoscale semiconductors, however, have quite different properties than their bulk cousins. Due to their small size, their charge carriers, electrons and holes, are confined to energy levels that are allowed by quantum mechanics. For example, quantum dots absorb or emit light at different wavelengths depending on, and therefore tunable by, their dimensions. These properties, however, may be modified by surface states induced by unsatisfied bonds, oxides of one or more elements of the semiconductor, or adsorbed impurities on the surface of the nanoobjects, and the like. The much higher surface area per unit volume (surface-to-volume ratio) of these materials magnifies the difficulties posed by surface states.
Recognizing the challenges of obtaining passivated nanoscale semiconductors, the technology described herein offers a way of passivating nanoscale objects and discloses structures that result from employing the technology.
Semiconducting nanomaterials may be fabricated in any of several ways, and no few of them may be bought from commercial suppliers. Some of the formation methods employ metal catalysts to direct the size and shape of the resulting nanomaterial. Other methods do not require catalysts. The choice of method for forming semiconducting nanomaterials depends on the composition of the material and on the desired shape of the resultant semiconducting nanomaterial, i.e. quantum dot, nanowire, nanotube, etc. Some of the methods employed to form semiconducting nanomaterials include laser ablation, chemical vapor deposition (CVD), molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), chemical vapor transport reactions, and low-temperature solution-phase synthesis. Other methods are also well known in the art. For example, high-aspect-ratio nanowires of Ge may fabricated by CVD using Au/Ge catalyst particles.
When Ge nanowires (NW) are transported through air, an oxide shell, typically 1-4 nm thick, forms on the surface. Unlike the case of the Si/SiO2 system, the GeOx oxide layer does not passivate the Ge nanomaterial surface.
The Ge NW shown in
After removal of the surface oxide from Au-decorated Ge NW, also at a temperature of about 290° C., however, assembly of graphene C fragments is initiated at the tip of the NW adjacent to the Au/Ge nanoparticle.
This controlled, metal-induced encapsulation of Ge nanomaterials allows assembly of a protective, passivating, C shell which may prevent oxidation of the wires in ambient environments.
Thus the inventive technology of seeding growth of a graphitic carbon encapsulant on a semiconducting nanomaterial using metal decoration of its surface offers a rational, controllable method of rendering oxidation-resistant nanomaterials not generally protected by native oxides.
As another example, GaN nanowires have been grown on Si(11) substrates without catalysts at 790° C. in an ultra-high-vacuum (UHV) chamber with a base pressure of 2·10−10 torr.
The wire in
To decorate the surface of these metal-free semiconducting nanowires, such as the GaN NWs, with islands of metal, about 15 nm of InGaN may be deposited at a nominal In:Ga ratio of 2.1:3 under the same conditions as for the GaN growth.
Unlike the uniform TEM contrast throughout of
Semiconductors need not be limited to uniform materials. Semiconducting superlattices are typically alternating nanoscale layers of at least two different materials that exhibit properties distinct from those of any of the constituent materials. Semiconducting nanomaterials, elemental, compound, or superlattices, have unique electrical, optical, and magnetic properties due to their physical properties (size, surface area, etc.) and chemical properties (e.g. surface bond configuration). It is these intrinsic properties that devices made from these materials seek to exploit. The passivating carbon shell as described herein may satisfy surface bonding configurations to reduce surface and interface states and allow the intrinsic properties to remain virtually unchanged. In other words, given the same stimulus, for example impinging electromagnetic radiation or an electrical potential, the encapsulated semiconducting materials give the same or virtually the same response, generation of charge carriers or an induced electrical current, as those of a pristine semiconducting nanomaterial absent surface states. The absence of surface or interface states may allow prediction of the response of the nanomaterial to a given stimulus, as opposed to the unpredictability of properties of unpassivated semiconducting nanomaterials.
Devices exploiting these properties may include, for example, sensors. The sensors work by detecting a change in response to a given stimulus. For example, the passivated core/shell structure may be irradiated by light (electromagnetic radiation) and an induced current or emission of light of a certain wavelength may be measured. The response to the stimulus, e.g. a change in the brightness or wavelength of the emitted light, may be different if the species, such as contaminant atoms or molecules, are attached to the C shell. The stimulus may be an applied voltage, an applied current, irradiation by electromagnetic radiation of at least one wavelength, or any useful stimulus such as a mechanical stress or exposure to particular chemical species, for example. The response to be detected may be an induced current or voltage, a mechanical strain, a change in the electronic structure of the nanomaterial, or absorption, reflection, or emission of electromagnetic radiation, i.e. light of at least one wavelength, and the like.
Species such as atoms, molecules, viruses, cells, bacteria, prokaryotes, and eukaryotes may be detected by such a sensor. Properties of these species, such as their presence or absence, their quantity (concentration or absolute magnitude), size, or identity, in addition to other properties such as oxidation state for example, may be determined by noting the modifications to the expected response. Other sensors may use an applied electrical potential to induce an electrical current, a current to induce a voltage, or a current to stimulate emission of light, for example.
In certain cases the atomically sharp interface between the shell and the core may create an electronically active junction. Such a junction may have properties such as those exhibited by semiconductor-semiconductor, semiconductor-metal, or semiconductor-dielectric junctions. These properties may be exploited on the nanoscale for application in electronic devices and sensors.
While the foregoing description has been made with reference to individual embodiments of the invention, it should be understood that those skilled in the art, making use of the teaching herein, may propose various changes and modifications without departing from the invention in its broader aspects.
The foregoing description being illustrative, the invention is limited only by the claims appended hereto.
Sutter, Eli Anguelova, Sutter, Peter Werner
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